The Me First Effect

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Practical Sales Training™ > How People Work > The Me First Effect

 
 

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The Me First Effect

TLDR: Buyers think of themselves first, so speak to that, not to you.

 

What Is It?

We think about ourselves first. So does every buyer you’ll ever speak to.

It’s not selfish. It’s just human.

Why Does It Work?

Most sellers talk about themselves. So they miss what the buyer is actually focused on.

Your buyer is thinking about their own needs. They’re putting their interests first, always.

So if you build your message around that fact, you get ahead of almost every competitor still talking about themselves.

How Can You Use It?

Think Like Your Buyer First

Ask what they want. Ask what they need. So work out what they like and dislike too, before you write a single word of copy.

Ask Your Existing Clients

Don’t guess at this. So ask your current clients directly what they were actually looking for when they chose you.

Give Them What You Learn

Once you know what they want, say exactly that back to them. So your message should mirror their goal, not describe your process.

When It Works Best

This works best on any page where you’re competing for attention. Homepages, ads and pitches all benefit here.

It also works well in crowded markets. So when every rival sounds the same, speaking to the buyer’s actual goal cuts through fast.

When It Becomes Dangerous

The risk is assuming you already know what buyers want. Because guessing wrong here can send your whole message in the wrong direction.

Talking about your achievements too much causes the same problem. So awards and credentials matter far less to a buyer than their own outcome.

Used well, this builds instant relevance. Used carelessly, it just repeats the mistake every rival is already making.

Common Mistakes

Leading With Your Achievements

“Award winning team” says nothing about the buyer’s outcome. So lead with what they get, not what you’ve won.

Guessing Instead Of Asking

Assuming what buyers want is risky. So ask your actual clients rather than relying on assumptions.

Describing Process Over Outcome

Buyers care less about how you work than what they get from it. So talk results first, process second.

The Me First Effect – An Example

The Web Design Agency

A web design agency drops “Our award-winning team of designers” from their homepage. Instead, they lead with: “Get a website that brings you more leads, faster.”

They also swap “pixel perfect” for “built to convert.” So “industry-standard tools” becomes “stress-free process.”

Even their testimonials change. “They were great to work with” becomes “They helped us grow” instead.

The message now speaks straight to the buyer’s goal, not the agency’s achievements. So it puts the client’s interest first, exactly where their attention already sits.

See also

 

Black background with large title the me first effect left a white square logo i ♥ me right a white text block as buyers and people we are always focusing on ourselves first before anything else

author avatar
James Newell Creator: Clear Sales Message™
James Newell specialises in sales messaging, buyer psychology and commercial communication that helps businesses increase conversion.

 

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